Medicine: War Fugues

In the town of Beeston, in central England, lived Dr. Leonard Phipps
Lockhart, a nervous, high-strung man of 41, with his devoted wife,
Mary. As medical chief of Boots Pure Drug Co. (biggest British drug
chain), he supervised the health and mental-hygiene activities of
22,000 employes. Three years ago, he got in the news by addressing a
meeting of topflight British scientists on "neuroses and unbalanced
lives." He knew what he was talking about.

In 1918, Leonard Lockhart had been a soldier on the Western Front. One
summer's day, after he saw every comrade...